Retribution Falls

Retribution Falls by Chris Wooding Page B

Book: Retribution Falls by Chris Wooding Read Free Book Online
Authors: Chris Wooding
Tags: Fiction, General, Fantasy
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impatiently.
    Crake grasped for a name. ‘Oh, it’s the one with lanterns out front, you know . . . The Howling Wolf or something . . . The Prowling Wolf! That’s it! That’s where I saw him!’
    ‘You sure about that?’ Grudge asked, unconvinced.
    ‘You’re not from around here, are you?’ Samandra asked, in that charmingly soft voice that made Crake feel like pond scum for lying to her.
    ‘Does it show?’ he said, with a grin. He gave them a smile, a glimpse of the golden tooth. Putting just a little power into it, letting the daemon suck a tiny fraction of his vital essence, just enough to allay their suspicions, just enough to say: believe him. ‘I’m visiting a friend.’
    Samandra’s eyes had flicked to his tooth for just an instant, drawn by the glimmer. Now they were back on him.
    ‘Be where we can find you,’ she said.
    Crake looked at her blankly.
    ‘The reward!’ she said, pointing at the handbill. ‘You do want the reward?’
    ‘Oh, yes!’ Crake said, recovering. ‘I’ll just be in here.’ He thumbed towards Old One-Eye’s.
    Samandra and Grudge exchanged glances, then they hurried off up the road in the direction of The Prowling Wolf. Crake let out a slow, shaky breath and plunged into the tavern.

    Frey was having a rare old time. He was exhausted from laughing and perfectly drunk, hovering in that elusive zone of inebriation where everything was in balance and all was right with the world. He never wanted this night to end. He loved Malvery and Pinn and even silent Harkins as brothers in arms. And if things began to wind down, well, the waitress had been giving him looks. She had a homely sort of face, but he liked her red hair and the freckles on her button nose, and he was in the mood for something curvy and soft tonight.
    What a life it was! A fine thing to be a captain, a freebooter, a lord of the skies.
    Crake’s arrival was something of a downer. ‘We’re getting out of here,’ he said, slapping the handbill onto the table and thrusting a finger at the picture of Frey. ‘Now!’
    Frey, a little slow off the mark, was more surprised by the picture than the danger it represented. He recognised it immediately. How did they get their hands on that one? Who gave it to them?
    Crake snatched the handbill away and stuffed it in his pocket. ‘I just had to head off Samandra Bree and Colden Grudge. They’re looking for us. They’ll be back in a few minutes. I suggest we not be here when they do.’
    ‘You met Samandra Bree?’ Pinn gaped. ‘You lucky turd!’
    ‘Spit and blood! Get moving, you idiots!’
    The penny had finally dropped. They surged up and pushed their way through the crowd towards the door.
    By the time they emerged from the tavern, Frey’s mood had seesawed from elation to cold, hard fear. The Century Knights? The Century Knights were on his tail? What had he done to deserve that?
    ‘Back to the Ketty Jay?’ Malvery suggested, scanning the street.
    ‘Bloody right,’ Frey muttered. ‘This is one more town we’re not coming back to.’
    ‘Why don’t we just emigrate and be done with it?’
    ‘Not a bad idea at that,’ Frey said over his shoulder, as he hurried away in the direction of the docks.
    The town’s landing pad was situated halfway along one of the mountainous arms that sheltered the bay. Houses became sparser as they approached, and the streets were whittled down to a single wide path that dipped and curved with the land. It was flanked by storage sheds, the occasional tavern and a customs house. The vast, moist breathing of the sea was loud here. Waves crashed and spumed on the rocks far below.
    Frey hugged his coat tight around him as he led his crew along the stony path. The previously welcoming town seemed suddenly threatening and nightmarish. He glanced over his shoulder for signs of pursuit, but nobody came running after them. Perhaps they’d given the Knights the slip.
    Wanted for murder? Piracy, fine, he’d own up to that (to himself,

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